Dissertation-The Will To Ornament
Dissertation-The Will To Ornament
Dissertation-The Will To Ornament
G.G.S.I.P.U
DISSERTATION
Submitted by
HIMANSHU SALUJA
0041731605 / B.ARCH
Acknowledgement
The journey has been long and there have been numerous co-pilots. I’d like to
thank all of them. First of all I would like to express my indebtedness towards my
computer and the world wide web, which stood by me at each and every second of my
academic semester and after him, my parents and friends who have been instrumental in
shaping me as I am.
I’d like to thank Prof. Rupinder Singh, my guide, who was persistent, patient and
considerate towards my idea and for planting all the seeds in my mind, directly or
indirectly.
I would also like to thank our coordinator Prof. ASHOK LAL for his consistent
guidance and update of the study, and for his immense support and consistent guidance
that was never short of encouragement whenever it was needed the most.
I’d like to thank my friends who have been constantly the source of new ideas and
who gave me invaluable inputs. And it would not have been possible without USAP and
KASHMERE GATE
Delhi
Certificate of Approval
The following study is hereby approved as a creditable work, carried out and presented in
approve any statement made, opinion expressed or conclusions drawn therein, but
approve the study only for the purpose for which it is submitted and satisfies itself as to
Contents:
Hypothesis ……..……..……..……..…….. iv
Methodology ……..……..……..……..…….. iv
Chapter 1:
The case of the anti-ornamentalists ……..……..……..……..…….. 2
Chapter 2:
The case of the anti anti-ornamentalists ……..……..……..…… 14
Conclusion ……..……..……..……..…….. 23
Bibliography ……..……..……..……..…….. 27
designer. What owners perceive of a space contrasts drastically to the architect’s point of
view and vice versa. These points of difference stem primarily from the difference in the
type of knowledge and experience and the vested interest in the project. An architect
believes himself to be a professional, well versed in the trade of building. He has learnt
and experienced a lot of aesthetic styles, tastes and patterns through a lot of projects. He
develops a natural prejudice towards or against some or the other vocabulary. Further,
most of the architects he looks up to have developed their very own architectural
vocabulary.
The client on the other hand does not have a thorough knowledge of international
styles or even regional ones. She also lacks background knowledge about context and
thus each piece becomes stand-alone. But their interest in the project is exponentially
These differences become apparent when only one of the two parties is
overpowered or ignored. Testament to that is the government sector where the interest of
the architect is purely superficial and does not consider the consequences the occupant
may face afterwards. Similar township projects by developers also boast of a get-rich-
quick scheme in which the end-user is neglected. Other architects like Corbusier show
immense interest in the project creating a Chandigarh as an extension to his own ambition
with still no consideration to the occupant. What this results in is massive encroachments!
On the other hand, when the client is cut loose, he makes a travesty by using the
newfound authority to further visions he hasn’t fully understood himself. Thus, we see
villas and chateaux resting peacefully (allegedly) on the by-lanes of “unauthorized Delhi
colonies”, glass boxes with a free solar heating subscription included, farmhouses the size
of palaces and a plethora of Greek gods in unison on the architrave of a Vasant Vihar
residence.
The client does not trust his architect for the architect confuses him with
“adaptable functionality” and “spatial composition” and “spatial context” and other
technical jargon to swindle money. The architect on the other hand strongly believes in
the ignorance of the client. After all, what does he know? He who is not trained in the arts
But the client knows his problems, if not the solutions to them. He knows that his
house should be his symbol of power, where his own place is judged by the statement the
house makes, whether socially or in financial terms, for which he painstakingly gathers
ornaments and puts them on the walls for all to see, maybe even worsening the situation.
And he is willing to take that risk to ornament. Something the architect has ignored
with ornament. It does not propose or reject the idea of ornamentation. Neither is it a
proposition for ornate city architecture nor does the discussion result in a handbook of
decoration styles. Furthermore, it does not seek to resolve the conflict between the client
and the architect. All it does is to bring to fore the architect’s subterranean desire for
etc.
Hypothesis:
The notion that ornamentation has no utilization in modern life will be challenged
The aim of this dissertation is to examine the purpose of decoration when used to
embellish buildings. It does not set out to advance the cause of ornate city architecture
nor does it provide a manual of good decorative design. Furthermore, it does not seek to
resolve the conflict between the client and the architect. All it does is to bring to fore the
vocabulary,’ ‘building rationale’ etc. It is simply one starting point for a discussion about
the nature of, or the need for, ornament and decoration in architectural design.
Methodology:
Textual analysis of
among others
Structure:
Analyzing the works of Adolf Loos, Mies van der Rohe among others
Analyzing the works of Frank Lloyd Wright, Robert Venturi among others
• Conclusion
Chapter 1
ornament from the structure and theme of the building. The first variants were conceived
early in the 20th century. Modern architecture was adopted by many influential architects
and architectural educators, however very few "Modern buildings" were built in the first
half of the century. It gained popularity after the Second World War and became the
dominant architectural style for institutional and corporate buildings for three decades.
was felt to be over the top in many cases. Many architects in Europe and the Americas
felt these overtly complex facades to be ugly and unacceptable. These architects wanted
to revolt against the prevailing style but instead some even rebelled against the very
nature or ornamentation (allegedly). They denied any associations with the ornament and
declared their own breed of architecture to be true to its nature, honest to its materials,
pure in its form as well as rational in its implementation. This “evolved” sensibility gave
Primary in their arguments was the total denial of ornament and decoration and
became a key feature in the International Style. I have, in this chapter, tried to analyze
texts of Adolf Loos and Mies van der Rohe. My attempt is to determine the degree of
truth to their declarations and observe the extent to which they have accomplished their
Adolf Loos
What sets the Austrian architect and critic Adolf Loos apart from the other
through the written word. If Loos is known for his writing, none is more famous than his
lecture and subsequent essay, “Ornament and Crime” (Ornament und Verbrechen)1. Even
a simple survey course will mouth the received opinion that Loos was militantly against
decoration. It has often been noted that Loos’s masterpiece had a subterranean influence
on the giants of high modernist architecture. Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius credited
Loos with being the first to advocate the radical elimination of all ornamentation in
buildings. Loos’s writing as a whole is thus often read as one point on the timeline of
This received opinion is problematic. On January 21, 1910, Loos did lecture on
this subject for nearly a half-hour at the Akademiscehr Verband fur Literatur und Musik
of Vienna [the Fremden Blatt of January 22 reports on the lecture].” He repeated the
lecture in 1913 in Vienna and in Copenhagen. These lectures were followed by a French
translation of the notes as an essay under the same title in Les Cahiers d’aujourd’ hui of
June 1913, and were also released in the second volume of L’Esprit nouveau (November
15, 1920). The text did not appear in German until 1929 (Frankfurter Zeitung, October
24), after which it was published many times. This brief historical account rectifies the
widespread theory that the suppression of ornament in modern architecture was in part a
consequence of an article published in Vienna in 1908, under the title of “Ornament and
1
Loos, Adolf. Lecture. 21 Jan 1910.
Crime.” One would search in vain for this article which, in reality, does not exist. It
should be dated from 1920, the year of its publication in L’esprit nouveau.
Overall the essay is distillation of the ideas Loos began developing in newspaper
articles during the 1890s. In the lecture and the essay Loos does argue against ornaments
done without consideration. But his argument is for the suppression of ornament in
functional objects. At the same time, he makes a distinction between superfluous and
protests against only the former. In fact, the latter is used generously in his works,
particularly in interiors.
His lecture when translated and published in Paris as “Ornament is Crime” was
read as a purist manifesto for purging ornamentation from architecture. A shocked Loos
reacted to this with a text titled “Ornament and Education” in which the misinterpretation
was labeled absurd and exaggerated. He argued that cultures will, through nature of
culture’s advancement or individual people’s taste and the inclination for ornamentation.
Understandably his nuanced argument was also misread and deployed for the service of a
is further explained with the example of tattoos2. He presents a startling contrast between
tattooing of Papuans to the tattooing of modern man (which at the time was frowned
upon). The contrast lay within the function of each. Where the former were a sign of
conformity and were expressive of their nature, the other merely took it upon itself to
2
Tournikiotis, Panayotis. Adolf Loos. New York, N.Y.: Princeton Architectural Press, 1994. Print. Page 24
disguise and mask the mediocrity of their holder’s identity (or so it seemed). He labeled
the latter to be degenerate, falsified and unethical but gave consent to the former. Thus he
approved the rules put in place (grammar) to render architecture more palatable, while
This argument is further elucidated with how we wear clothes. Loos believes
clothes should be neutral and transparent of the person within. It should reflect discretion
and simplicity. Here ornament should only be used to be compliant to common culture of
society. Similarly, architecture should be universal and durable, able to withstand tastes
heavily on fashion, and its existence is then justified not by its solidity but the prevailing
taste. However, functional objects with a small shelf life (like carpets and such) can be
Loos says that a woman adorns and ornaments herself to become a mystery to
expressions. But to rise above a primitive art, consciously produced, ornamentation needs
similar to architecture.
character of ornament. Forms that resisted the passage of time were inherent in most
typologies and were truly modern and durable. Classical architecture, hence, incorporated
Greek, Roman, or Renaissance styles because its traits were simple and universal.
3
Tournikiotis, Panayotis. Adolf Loos. New York, N.Y.: Princeton Architectural Press, 1994. Print. Page 26
Figure 1: Looshaus
Thus the arguments he supported here represent honesty and clarity of intended
function. Also, ornament of a particular style was looked down because it seemed
unnecessary and inefficient due to the ever changing tastes of society. But universally
accepted and time tested vocabulary was more than welcome and Loos also used it
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is widely regarded as one of the most influential
figures of 20th century Modern architecture. Mies pursued an ambitious lifelong mission
to create not an architectural style, but a new architectural vocabulary representing the
simple and rational, to achieve his goals. His notorious motto “Less is more” helped him
create an image of extreme simplicity, by enlisting their aid to serve visual, structural and
compositions using simple cubic volumes while dismissing the ornament as irrelevant.
His thirty years as an American architect reflected a structural, pure approach towards the
‘universal’ spaces with clearly visible structural framework which he tried to achieve
mostly by featuring pre-manufactured steel shapes in-filled with large sheets of glass.
Crown Hall is hailed far and wide as Mies’s greatest work and one of the most
Completed in 1956, the building houses the architecture school of the Illinois Institute of
The building is conceived in two levels of a rectangle 220’ long by 120’ wide
which houses a column free interior space on the upper level supported by exposed steel
columns and exterior grade steel girders visible above the roof. At intervals, these
columns extend upward to form planes of steel partitioning the roof expanse as if in an
attempt to raise itself from the rest of the campus as does the floating impression of the
floor (very similar to the Farnsworth house). Varying degrees of transparency is offered
by the glass façade wrapping the structure tightly in which the open free flowing interiors
reside.
Mies faced the challenge that the earlier buildings for the campus would be
I was not afraid of that [such a comparison]. The concept would not become
accepting the scientific and technological driving and sustaining forces of our
means, but it is not only concerned with a purpose but also with a meaning, as it
Proportion.4
providing a purpose. He further goes on to support it with calling it a subset of the eternal
textual framework to view Crown Hall. For example, Kevin Harrington writes:
During the day, Crown Hall seems a precisely defined, translucent, and
its interior illumination appears to make the building seem almost to float on a
5
cushion of light.
Mies talks about expressing through honesty of materials and calls himself a
medium through which these materials express themselves. He talks about discarding
personal baggage and embracing values that remain universal but still fit every situation.
The structure or materials speak about the building itself without invoking the need to
add any unnecessary ‘ornament’ to supplement the expression of the built and the space
enclosed within. This created a radical aesthetic. These visual and spatial expressions
4
Van der Rohe, Ludwig Mies. Zukowsky, John. Mies Reconsidered: His Career, Legacy, and Disciples.
Chicago, IL: Art Institute of Chicago; New York, N.Y.: Rizzoli International Publications. 1986. Print.
Page 23
5
Kevin Harrington, “S.R. Crown Hall”. AIA guide to Chicago. San Diego: Harcourt Brace & Co., 1993:
388-89. Print
Much of the building's success comes from its elegant proportions and its relation
to the overall site: the building is set back from the street by ninety feet, and in from the
side by thirty. The forecourt so created uses reflecting pools and a low boundary wall in
green marble to set off the building, borrowing heavily from Mies' earlier Pavilion in
Barcelona (1929).
The building's external faces are given their character by the quality of the
materials used - the tinted glass and the bronze 'I-beams' applied all the way up
Mies had first used similar applied I-beams (but in steel) at his 1951 apartment
towers at Lake Shore Drive in Chicago, welded to the outside of the structural
columns.6
His purported aim was the stiffening of the frame of each bay, but more important
was the creation of a surface texture that relieved the potential monotony of a
smooth facade, while emphasizing the verticality of the overall form. The
architect later explained that he had used the device primarily because, without it,
The confession of the architect here speaks volumes of the inner workings of the
themselves honestly and his own role in the process to be just that of a medium through
which the entire expression of the building attains a tangible form. On the other hand he
affirms that the decision to use the bronze I-beams was primarily affected by aesthetic
resolve. Similarly, was it necessitated by material to raise the floor slab to create an
illusion of it floating on light? Or the exterior steel columns to extend above the roof line
and make them so visible? Visualizing the structure without these would in essence take
away a nice chunk out of the identity of the building. Thus there is a high reverence to
aesthetic values at the cost of rational construction by not just the architect but the critics
as well. Otherwise the illusion of floating floors and the extension of steel columns to
6
Rogers, Christy. “S.R. Crown Hall.” Galinsky- people enjoying buildings worldwide. Galinsky. 1998.
Web. 15 Dec 2009
7
Wiseman, Carter. Shaping a Nation: twentieth-century American architecture and its makers. New York:
Norton. 1998. Print
form distinct vertical planes on the roof of S.R. Crown Hall or the Farnsworth House
why is it so easily overruled in favor of aesthetic values, intangible and illogical and most
of all, highly personal? Or is it that his expression of how the building should ‘look right’
trumps over the expression of materials? If all that the architect wants to create is his own
expression then it is not wrong to argue that he has not ventured far from the practice of
All that Mies has managed to achieve here is another style, not too different in
approach to the rest but highly radical in terms of aesthetic appeal. He might have
managed to lead a ‘modernist revolution’ among other things but ultimately, he too falls
prey to the instinct of providing a self driven aesthetic which he swears against. It seems
that his style, so rigorously fought for in a battle cry against ornamentation, was just a
style to get other people to accept his version of ornamentation. Using ornament in the
name of expression does not change the fact that Mies poured in a lot of effort to cater to
Chapter 2
Postmodern architecture was a style brought forth by architects growing weary of the
dominance of the Modern movement. Although its first examples can be cited from the 1950s
but it gained prominence in the 70s and continues to influence present day architecture.
modernism. This movement became known for its own brand of international style where the
functional and formalized shapes and spaces of the modernist movement are replaced by
unapologetically diverse aesthetics: styles collide, form is adopted for its own sake, and new
architects often regard modern spaces as soulless and bland. The divergence in opinions comes
down to a difference in goals: modernism is rooted in minimal and true use of material as well as
absence of ornament, while postmodernism is a rejection of strict rules set by the early
modernists and seeks exuberance in the use of building techniques, angles, and stylistic
embraces and explores history unlike modernism which, to this day, continues to dismiss it as
postmodernism and the value and significance to ornament within the movement. The first essay
obsessed with rejection of modernism, being the visionary who could spell the tenets of
postmodernism as a natural continuance of styles around the world. The second essay analyses
the texts of Robert Venturi to understand his views opposing anti-ornamentalist modernists.
Leading the front for anti-anti-ornamentation was Frank Lloyd Wright, a renowned
American architect, interior design, writer and educator. Wright advocated organic architecture8
and developed concepts using the same for Prairie School movement of architecture9 and the
museums etc.
8
Best demonstrated by Falling Waters also shown in figure 4
9
Exemplified by the Robie House and the Westcott House
10
E.g.: Rosenbaum House
11
Brewster, Mike (2004-07-28). "Frank Lloyd Wright: America's Architect". Business Week (The McGraw-Hill
Companies). 22 Jan 2008. Print.
Wright considered “The Art and Craft of the Machine,” his first public address on
architecture (1901), one of his seminal statements. He outlined here the theory of architecture
To Wright art was in crisis; its only hope was in the machine, “the modern sphinx whose
riddle the artist must solve if he would that art should live.” Wright it seems saw himself
Wright saw the effects of the industrial revolution and described it not as a huge
advancement but as a double edged sword. According to him, this had created the modern city,
one of the most monstrous living things ever to exist, but one of the most magnificent as well.
However, he differentiates between being ‘industrial’ and being ‘mechanical’ and favored the
machine.
A machine could be beautiful: the solar system was but a machine. Hence he accepted
the machine as a tool of the craftsman, but would not condone making a human being
13
subservient to it.
Wright realized the tremendous potential the machine had for the future of humanity but
feared that it would dominate the course of human civilization. Taming the machine, the monster
city, would be the first step to giving it a soul and forge a harmony between man and the
machine.
12
Zabel, Craig Robert. Munshower, Susan Scott. American public Architecture: European roots and native
expressions. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University, 1989. Print. Pg 139
13
Zabel, Craig Robert. Munshower, Susan Scott. American public Architecture: European roots and native
expressions. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University, 1989. Print. Pg 140
suggesting art to take up that role. Thus an artist would be born sympathetic to the role of the
machine to humanity but still subservient to it and his work would be akin to nature’s creative
forces.
To this effect, two relationships would be birthed. The first would be the reaction
between craftsmanship and man; the second between nature and its tremendous adaptive
capability allowing it to always strike the most appropriate form for the given function. A
machine could then be a subset within craftsmanship issuing tools to better the art and strike as
beautiful. Wright also speculated that the second relationship would then give direction to the
artist if he would assume that had nature been the artist and machine been its tool, what methods
This guideline was Wright’s mantra to achieving what he called a ‘natural’ way to build.
It could spark off a debate where Wright could arguably have done away with non-functional
ornament, but there can be no doubt to the fact that he endorsed integral ornamentation as second
nature to humankind.
"... But here now ornament is in its place. Ornament meaning not only surface qualified
by human imagination but imagination giving natural pattern to structure. Perhaps this
phrase says it all without further explanation. This resource - integral ornament - is new
in the architecture of the world, at least insofar not only as imagination qualifying a
surface - a valuable resource - but as a greater means than that; imagination giving
14
natural pattern to structure itself.
14
Wright, Frank Lloyd. “The Natural House”. House + home. Vol. 7, no. 1 (Jan. 1955)
Robert Venturi
Regarded by many as the most influential architect of the twentieth century, Robert
Venturi is an architect, planner and a prolific writer on architectural theories. Born Robert
Charles Venturi Jr. on 25th June 1925 in Philadelphia, he became an architect of great fame when
he took Mies van der Rohe head on by coining the phrase, “less is a bore”. His words brought
staunch opposition to modernism and were the first transcripts of the post-modernist era.
Venturi has offered much more than just theories. His works include not just the
landmark Vanna Venturi house, but also spread across various projects from museums to urban
architecture with his 1966 book Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture. It has
been called the most important work on architecture since Le Corbusier’s Vers une
Architecture. Venturi famously responds to Mies van der Rohe’s slogan that “Less is
more”- that ornament and diversity of style are to be eliminated- with the playful, “Less is
a bore.” Venturi’s architecture is marked by eclectisism and the refusal to reject popular
commercial architecture as inherently vulgar. His aim is not to replace unity of style with
pluralism, but to argue for a less simple, more complex forms of unity, which constitute
what he calls “the difficult whole,” buildings that thrive on inner tension rather than trying
Venturi claimed that modernism made architecture too reductive. The modernists’ way of
limiting the problems it would (could) solve produced pure but boring solutions, resulting in
15
Venturi, Robert. Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture. New York: Museum of Modern Art; Boston:
distributed by New York Graphic Society, 1977. Print. Page 16. Quoted from: Cahoone, Lawrence E. From
modernism to postmodernism: an anthology. Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 1996. Print. Page 40.
architecture being redundant in comparison to modern science, art or poetry, all of which
recognize and embrace complexity and contradiction. Thus the argument he presents is that
His controversial call to explore history, “the messy vitality” of the built environment radically
orthodox Modern architecture. I like elements which are hybrid rather than “pure,”
rather than simple, vestigial as well as innovating, inconsistent and equivocal rather than
direct and clear. I am all for messy vitality over obvious unity. I include the non sequitur
16
and proclaim the duality.
The excludability clause in Modernism, claims Venturi, proves to be not just dull,
mundane and plain boring but also inadequate and redundant. Modernism meant to be idealistic
saying “don’t judge a book by its cover.” Venturi asks them to do the same thing by not
dismissing ornament for it seems compromising, distorted, perverse or even redundant at times.
For him, ornament and inclusive nature of architecture seems much more important (and
instinctive) than all that the modernists mention its problems to be. In fact Robert Venturi argues
strongly that:
16
Venturi, Robert. Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture. New York: Museum of Modern Art; Boston:
distributed by New York Graphic Society, 1977. Print. Page 16.
…the artist is not someone who designs in order to prove his or her theory and certainly
not to suit an ideology....Any building that tries merely to express a theory or any building
that starts with a theory and works very deductively is very dry, so we say that we work
inductively.17
For him the theories surrounding architectural design are not that important as the actual
design process. Circumstances and opinions may deviate us from the architectural theory but
buildings trying to suit a theory limit their creative energies and the total number of possible
solutions. As a true proponent of inclusivity, Venturi does not accept this limitation. Venturi also
emphasizes on the need for a predetermined convention to even rebel against. Venturi says:
You have to have something basic that you either build on or evolve from or revolt
against. You have to have something there in the first place and the only way to get it is
18
to copy, in a good sense of the word.
17
Lawson, Bryan. Design in Mind. Oxford [England]; Boston: Butterworth Architecture, 1994. Print.
18
Lawson, Bryan. Design in Mind. Oxford [England]; Boston: Butterworth Architecture, 1994. Print.
Thus, he says that ignoring or overlooking traditional styles assuming they did not exist
robs an entire generation of good examples of architecture, whether good or bad. Venturi claims,
"It is better to be good than to be original" 19 thereby letting go of the mental block that
modernists had put up against learning from history. It led to a boom of exploration of
architectural history in America and abroad, in search of formal principles to guide and enrich
contemporary architectural design. Ironically, the same institution that had promoted European
modern architecture in the US under the banner of the International Style became the leader in
rejecting it.
19
Lawson, Bryan. Design in Mind. Oxford [England]; Boston: Butterworth Architecture, 1994. Print.
Conclusion
At the same time, Modern Architecture has divorced this aesthetic aspiration from
economics of building and the expression of pure volumes or machine aesthetics, ornamentation
became decadent, primitive, undesired and superfluous. Ergo, the client who wants
But the fact is that ornamentation persists. As this dissertation has shown, it persists
precisely in the endeavors of the architect, even when they are taken to be the most radical
exemplars of eschewing ornamentation. Loos did not fight it, and Mies too failed to resist the
temptation to do so.
But perhaps more important is the client’s willingness to sideline such issues as cost for
the sake of ornamentation. A house for its inhabitants does not merely serve the purpose of
shelter. To most owners, a house is the statement one makes to the community. It represents the
individual’s wealth, affluence, place in society and an overall snapshot of the owner’s value.
“The building did not merely serve the purpose of providing physical accommodation or
allowing life to be lived with a kind of natural ease and grace. That was but a minor
20
Pevsner, Sir Nikolaus. An outline of European Architecture. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1960. Print. Page 15.
Quoted from Bhatia, Gautam. Punjabi Baroque and other memories of architecture. New Delhi; New York, N.Y.:
Penguin Books, 1994. Print.
“In the rush towards purism, the house had lost something of its former imaginative
ways. He (the owner) wanted the eyes to linger once again, to focus, to examine and to
appreciate. Space – of prime importance in the concrete box - was too diffuse; it could
intangible as space could not produce even the smallest hint of jealousy in the passerby.
So naturally, the envelope that contained the space slowly began to gain importance”21
Bhatia points out further that architecture is not just such a medium for clients but also
for architects as well. That they too express their concerns and priorities and “who they are”
and ideas, uttered in the final making, albeit influenced by eternal logic of places, and of
the people who built it, and those who live in it. To my mind all art – and so architecture
– becomes a vast canvas of confession. And the artist reveals everything of himself,
either through draftsmanship or through the facility of words. Buildings too are given to
self description. As works of architecture they express the architect’s own perceptions of
place, the way he would make it for himself, the way he would occupy it. Though the
exploratory and personal nature of any artistic endeavor makes the selection of the
subject critical to the work this is often not possible in architecture. Where it may be easy
21
Bhatia, Gautam. Punjabi Baroque and other memories of architecture. New Delhi; New York, N.Y.: Penguin
Books, 1994. Print. Page 3,4,50,51
for a painter to be selective about the subject of his study, it is not possible for an
architect to choose his field of design enquiry; to draw apples and other fruits or
imaginary landscapes may be very well for an artist working in the confinement of a
studio but ideas that may be fermenting in the architect’s mind over the nature of
institutional design can hardly be put to test if the client wishes to construct only a family
house; the nagging quest for innovative skyscraper concepts cannot be quashed in
buildings which the byelaws restrict to only two storey. Personal ideas must necessarily
mesh with the restrictions imposed by the users of the building, and the authorities
My dissertation has pointed to the works of architects who do work with ornamentation.
Robert Venturi ‘s Vanna Venturi house or Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonian house stands
testament to works of ornamentation even within the domain of most clients, i.e. residences, but
even then they miss out this aspect of interaction with clients. Wright’s icicles are ornamentation
based on his own childhood memory—but on somebody else’s house. Venturi repeatedly notes
that “I am all for messy vitality,” inclusivity, ornamentations among other things. But never was
noted saying that “I am interested in the client.” The will of the architect persists here.
Admittedly my textual argument here is focused on the architect—the client, just as the
proverbial “subaltern” does not speak or write lengthy tomes on architectural ornamentation. But
it is his concern which has continuously shadowed my readings. As I read the texts—sometimes
22
Bhatia, Gautam. Punjabi Baroque and other memories of architecture. New Delhi; New York, N.Y.: Penguin
Books, 1994. Print. Page 1
continuously asked, where is the client, where are his aspirations? Dr. Farnsworth sued Mies
after he finished her house, the house which was but a shelter to his ego.
I may be a romanticist, or just not aware of my own limitations as an architect to be. But I
believe that beauty belongs to the structure when it brings happiness to the inhabitants and
represent them. This beauty is the same not in just art, architecture, literature but in every sphere
of life. Be it fancy crockery, stylistic shoes, designer clothes or a trendy kitchen appliance,
beauty and aesthetics govern our interaction and sensibilities with the world. Therefore the will
Bibliography
Lectures:
• Loos, Adolf. Lecture. 21 Jan 1910.
Books:
• Tournikiotis, Panayotis. Adolf Loos. New York, N.Y.: Princeton Architectural Press,
1994. Print.
• Van der Rohe, Ludwig Mies. Ed: Zukowsky, John. Mies Reconsidered: His Career,
Legacy, and Disciples. Chicago, IL: Art Institute of Chicago; New York, N.Y.: Rizzoli
• Zabel, Craig Robert. Munshower, Susan Scott. American public Architecture: European
roots and native expressions. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University, 1989.
Print.
Modern Art; Boston: distributed by New York Graphic Society, 1977. Print.
1994. Print.
• Bhatia, Gautam. Punjabi Baroque and other memories of architecture. New Delhi; New
Articles:
• Kevin Harrington, “S.R. Crown Hall”. AIA guide to Chicago. San Diego: Harcourt Brace
• Wright, Frank Lloyd. “The Natural House”. House + home. Vol. 7, no. 1 (Jan. 1955)
Web references:
• Rogers, Christy. “S.R. Crown Hall.” Galinsky- people enjoying buildings worldwide.
List of figures:
• Figure 1:
Description: The Looshaus
Dated: September 2004
Source: Wikipedia
Author: Alexander Mayrhofer
• Figure 2:
Description: S.R. Crown Hall
Dated: 14 May 2006
Source: Wikipedia
Author: Jeremy Atherton
• Figure 3:
Description: Seagram Building
Dated: 2007-06-25
Source: Wikipedia
Author: Mikerussell
• Figure 4:
Description: Falling Waters
Dated: 18-10-2007
Source: Wikipedia
Author: Sxenco
• Figure 5:
Description: Freedom Plaza,Washington DC
Dated: 23-10-2008
Source: Wikipedia
Author: APK is not a Womanizer